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  • Russia claims nuclear plant targeted during massive Ukrainian drone attack | Russia-Ukraine war News


    Russia and Ukraine continue to swap daily barrages, with the prospects of ceasefire talks appearing slim.

    A nuclear power plant was among targets during a massive Ukrainian drone attack, Russian officials have said.

    Moscow said on Wednesday that the country’s energy infrastructure had come under attack by at least 100 drones overnight. Ukraine also reported strikes. The continuing barrages were accompanied by barbs from the two countries’ presidents, suggesting little prospect of peace talks.

    The Russian Ministry of Defence said on Telegram that 104 drones were involved in raids across western Russia, many targeting power and oil facilities.

    Local officials claimed that air defence systems had destroyed one drone that had attempted to strike the nuclear power plant in the western region of Smolensk.

    “According to preliminary information, one of the drones was shot down during an attempt to attack a nuclear power facility,” Governor Vasily Anokhin said on the Telegram messaging app. “There were no casualties or damage.”

    The Smolensk Nuclear Power Plant, the largest power generating plant in Russia’s northwest, was working normally on Wednesday morning, RIA state news agency reported, citing the plant’s press service.

    Petrochemicals giant Sibur reported a fire at its oil refinery in the Nizhny Novgorod region about 800km (500 miles) from the Ukrainian border.

    Russia’s air defences reportedly destroyed drones over nine regions, including 11 over Smolensk, which sits on the border with Belarus. Nearly half were hit over Kursk, where Ukrainian troops have occupied several villages for months following an incursion.

    Ukraine and Russia have been swapping drone and missile strikes on an almost daily basis, with energy infrastructure a particular target amid winter.

    Warnings that the fighting could spark a nuclear disaster have been sounded since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of its neighbour in February 2022. However, most of the concern has focused on Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia plant, which sits on the frontlines in the east of the country.

    Ukraine’s military said on Wednesday that Russia launched an overnight drone attack of its own, resulting in air alerts in multiple regions.

    A port in the Odesa region was reportedly targeted, while debris from a destroyed drone fell near a metro station in the capital, Kyiv, according to Mayor Vitali Klitschko.

     

    Prospects for peace talks

    Amid the continuing air attacks, the return of Donald Trump as United States president has revived rhetoric over the possibility of a ceasefire.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Tuesday that his country could hold peace talks with Ukraine, but ruled out speaking directly with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

    “If (Zelenskyy) wants to participate in the negotiations, I will allocate people to take part,” Putin said, calling the Ukrainian leader “illegitimate” because his presidential term expired during martial law.

    “If there is a desire to negotiate and find a compromise, let anyone lead the negotiations there … Naturally, we will strive for what suits us, what corresponds to our interests,” he added.

    Zelenskky responded by saying Putin was frustrating efforts to stop the fighting.

    “Today, Putin once again confirmed that he is afraid of negotiations, afraid of strong leaders and does everything possible to prolong the war,” Zelenskyy posted on X.

    Kyiv has warned against it being excluded from any peace talks between Russia and the US, accusing Putin of wanting to “manipulate” Trump.





    In a recent development in the Russia-Ukraine war, Russia has claimed that one of its nuclear power plants was targeted during a massive drone attack by Ukrainian forces. The attack reportedly took place on Saturday, causing concern about the safety of the plant and potential environmental consequences.

    The Russian government has accused Ukraine of using drones to target the plant, which is located in the city of Beloyarsk in the Ural Mountains. The plant is said to have sustained damage, but no radiation leaks have been reported so far.

    Ukrainian officials have denied the allegations, stating that they have no intention of targeting nuclear facilities. They have called the accusations “provocative” and “baseless.”

    The incident has raised fears about the escalation of the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, as targeting a nuclear power plant could have catastrophic consequences. Both sides have been urged to exercise restraint and work towards a peaceful resolution to the conflict.

    Stay tuned for more updates on this developing story.

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    1. Russia-Ukraine war
    2. Ukrainian drone attack
    3. Nuclear plant attack
    4. Russia claims
    5. Russia-Ukraine conflict
    6. War news
    7. Nuclear plant targeting
    8. Ukraine-Russia relations
    9. Military drone strike
    10. International conflict

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  • Russia-Ukraine war live: Ukraine police conduct nationwide raids over draft evasion | Ukraine


    Ukraine police conduct raids in draft evasion probe

    Ukrainian police said Friday its officers were conducting 200 searches nationwide as part of an ongoing probe into the illegal exit of military-aged men from the country.

    Kyiv has been pushing a sweeping and divisive mobilisation campaign to boost its military, which is struggling to hold back Russia’s significantly larger army that is advancing across at several sectors across the front, AFP reported.

    “The national police force is conducting more than 200 searches regarding cases of illegal border crossings” of Ukrainian men who are eligible for army service, the national police said in a statement.

    The raids announced on Friday are just the latest step in a country-wide probe launched by law enforcement last week when Kyiv said police were searching around 600 homes, offices and other sites.

    Last week, police said the operation was primarily targeting the organisers of schemes that help draft evaders to illegally cross the Ukrainian border.

    Police said Friday that its searches were being conducted in 19 different regions and posted pictures of officers with weapons entering and cameras at what appeared to be private residences and offices.

    Key events

    Russian missile kills three in Ukraine’s Kryvyi Rih, governor says

    A Russian missile attack on Ukraine’s southern city of Kryvyi Rih on Friday killed at least three people and injured others, the regional governor said.

    The attack damaged an educational facility and a residential building, he added on Telegram.

    The Kremlin said on Friday it does not expect the United States to soften its position on sanctions against Russian oil once president-elect Donald Trump takes office, despite his administration’s readiness for dialogue on the Ukraine war.

    Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov was commenting on remarks by Trump’s choice for treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, that he “100%” supports raising sanctions on Russian oil producers if Trump asks him to.

    Peskov said Russia could not expect the United States to fundamentally change its stance on sanctions.

    Kremlin says it will study Ukraine’s new agreement with UK

    The Kremlin said on Friday that it will study the details of Ukraine’s new 100-year agreement with the United Kingdom.

    Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov called the idea of British military bases in Ukraine “worrying” and said that Moscow views negatively the prospect of British cooperation with Ukraine in the Sea of Azov, calling it Russia’s “internal sea”.

    British prime minister Keir Starmer pledged on Thursday to work with Ukraine and allies to offer Kyiv security guarantees if a ceasefire is negotiated with Russia, and offering more support through a 100-year partnership deal.

    Hungary PM Orbán says time to scrap EU sanctions against Russia

    It is time to scrap European Union sanctions against Russia, Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán said on Friday in an interview on state radio.

    Orban said the EU will have to adapt to a new era as Donald Trump returns to the White House, and should create a relationship with Russia that is “free of sanctions.”

    Romania’s national airspace was breached during an overnight Russian attack on neighbouring Ukraine and the likely impact zone of a drone was found near the border in the south-eastern county of Tulcea, the defence ministry said on Friday.

    Nato member Romania scrambled two fighter jets to monitor the attack from the air.

    Drone fragments and airspace breaches have occurred regularly over the past year and a half as Russia has attacked Ukraine’s Danube river port infrastructure.

    German foreign minister Annalena Baerbock indirectly criticised chancellor Olaf Scholz for his reluctance to approve a further 3 billion euros ($3.09bn) in additional military aid for Ukraine.

    “To be honest, it hurts me a lot,” she said without mentioning the chancellor’s name in an interview with Politico released on Friday, adding that for some politicians gaining a few votes was more important than securing Europe’s peace and freedom.

    Earlier this week, Scholz said he had suggested expanding the currently earmarked 12 billion euros for this year, but the additional money must not be provided at the cost of cutting social spending.

    UK to back Ukraine ‘beyond this terrible war’ with 100-year pact, says Starmer

    Luke Harding

    Luke Harding

    Keir Starmer has announced a “historic” 100-year partnership with Ukraine, saying the UK would support the country “beyond this terrible war” and into a future where it is “free and thriving again”.

    Speaking during his first trip to Kyiv as prime minister, Starmer said the unprecedented agreement reflected the “huge affection between our two nations”. He added that “right now Putin shows no signs of wanting to stop” his “unrelenting aggression”.

    The point was dramatically underscored by a Russian drone flying over Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s Mariinskyi Palace in Kyiv while the two leaders were in the middle of talks. Anti-aircraft fire erupted as the drone buzzed overhead.

    Loud booms were heard as Ukrainian air defences tried to shoot it down. City officials said there had been no casualties, but that falling debris had damaged a car.

    Ukraine police conduct raids in draft evasion probe

    Ukrainian police said Friday its officers were conducting 200 searches nationwide as part of an ongoing probe into the illegal exit of military-aged men from the country.

    Kyiv has been pushing a sweeping and divisive mobilisation campaign to boost its military, which is struggling to hold back Russia’s significantly larger army that is advancing across at several sectors across the front, AFP reported.

    “The national police force is conducting more than 200 searches regarding cases of illegal border crossings” of Ukrainian men who are eligible for army service, the national police said in a statement.

    The raids announced on Friday are just the latest step in a country-wide probe launched by law enforcement last week when Kyiv said police were searching around 600 homes, offices and other sites.

    Last week, police said the operation was primarily targeting the organisers of schemes that help draft evaders to illegally cross the Ukrainian border.

    Police said Friday that its searches were being conducted in 19 different regions and posted pictures of officers with weapons entering and cameras at what appeared to be private residences and offices.

    Morning summary

    Hello and welcome to the Ukraine live blog. I’m Tom Ambrose and I’ll be bringing you all the latest news from the conflict throughout today.

    We start with news that Ukrainian air defences downed 33 of 50 drones launched by Russia overnight, the air force said on Friday.

    It said that 9 drones were “lost”, in reference to Ukraine’s use of electronic warfare to redirect Russian drones, while one left Ukraine in the direction of Romania.

    In other news:

    • Ukraine is to receive a new, rapidly developed bespoke air defence system called Gravehawk as part of the support announced by Keir Starmer as he visited Kyiv on Thursday. The system, roughly the size of a shipping container, has been developed by Britain and Denmark to allow the Ukrainians to shoot down aerial threats using retrofitted air-to-air missiles launched from the ground – meaning, according to the British government, that it can “use Ukrainian missiles already in their armed forces’ possession” to shoot down Russian missiles and drones. The British government revealed that two prototypes of Gravehawk were tested in Ukraine in September, with 15 to be sent this year.

    • Ukraine’s military said on Thursday that it hit a large Russian depot for military fuel at Liskinska in the Voronezh region of Russia with drones, starting a “large-scale fire”. The governor of the Voronezh region, Alexander Gusev, confirmed that several drones “sparked a fire at an oil depot”. Videos posted by witnesses showed a substantial blaze.

    • A major Russian gunpowder factory in the Tambov region was attacked, a Ukrainian official said on Thursday, without directly claiming Ukrainian responsibility or specifying the consequences of the attack. “The enterprise is one of the main suppliers of explosive materials for the army of the Russian Federation,” said Andriy Kovalenko, the head of Ukraine’s centre for countering disinformation.

    • France and Norway will meet their commitments on schedule to deliver jet fighters to Ukraine, the two countries’ defence ministers said on Thursday in Oslo. Norway has promised Ukraine six US-made F-16s with deliveries spread out across 2024 and 2025, while France has said it will provide an unspecified number of Mirage 2000-5s during the first quarter of 2025.

    • A Ukrainian brigade has used ground drones equipped with machine guns and mines to carry out what it claims is the first documented machine-only ground assault in the war with Russia. The Khartiia brigade said last month’s attack in the north-eastern Kharkiv region used assault, mine-laying and mine-clearing vehicles guided by aerial drones. The operation paved the way for a successful infantry advance, the brigade said. “They get as close to their [Russian] dugouts as possible and then explode,” a Ukrainian crew member explained to the Reuters news agency.

    • Ukraine said on Thursday it had sentenced a former local official to 15 years behind bars on high treason charges for aiding Russian forces. Local media identified him as Oleksandr Kurpil, a deputy of the town of Trostianets in the Sumy region, and said he had been detained in May 2022.

    • Russia’s rights ombudswoman said on Thursday that she had discussed with her Ukrainian counterpart the search for residents missing from Russia’s Kursk border region after Ukrainian troops seized territory there last August. Ukraine has said that about 2,000 civilians remain in territory it controls, while Russia has put the number reported missing at less than 1,000. Russian ombudswoman Tatyana Moskalkova called the talks “a big step towards strengthening trust and realising concrete joint actions”. Ukrainian human rights commissioner Dmytro Lubinets confirmed they “agreed to continue the mutual exchange of information regarding the search for missing persons among prisoners of war”.

    • Ukraine’s gross domestic product (GDP) growth is expected to slow to 2.7% this year from probably about 3.6% in 2024, deputy economy minister Andrii Teliupa said on Thursday. The forecast is below the 3-4% expected by most Ukrainian analysts and economists. Ukrainian businesses are suffering from staff shortages as tens of thousands of Ukrainian men have been mobilised into the army and millions of refugees remain abroad. Ukraine is also battling an energy crisis as Russia bombards the sector.

    • A compensation scheme opened on Thursday for Ukrainians who have lost close relatives during Russia’s invasion. Thousands of requests for damages have already been received. The Register of Damages for Ukraine is based in The Hague and is designed to function as a record of all eligible claims seeking reparation for the damage, loss and injury over the Russian full-scale invasion. Created by the Council of Europe and joined by the EU, the register will ultimately work out a financial total with a view towards extracting reparations from Moscow.

    • The Russian president, Vladimir Putin, and the Iranian president, Masoud Pezeshkian, are due to meet on Friday in Russia and sign a strategic cooperation agreement. Russia’s state-owned Tass news agency quoted Iran’s ambassador to Moscow, Kazem Jalali, as saying the cooperation agreement would not include a mutual-defence clause like Moscow’s pacts with North Korea and Belarus. Ukraine said in 2024 that Russia had launched more than 8,000 Iran-developed Shahed drones since the invasion. Kyiv first accused Iran of supplying the drones to Russia in autumn 2022.

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    In a recent development in the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war, Ukrainian police have conducted nationwide raids to crack down on draft evasion. The Ukrainian government has been mobilizing its forces to defend against the Russian invasion, and draft evasion is seen as a serious offense during this time of crisis.

    The raids targeted individuals who have avoided conscription or failed to report for military service. According to authorities, anyone found guilty of draft evasion could face up to five years in prison.

    The crackdown on draft evasion comes as Ukraine continues to face intense fighting in various regions, with reports of heavy casualties on both sides. The Ukrainian government has been urging citizens to join the military and defend their country against the Russian aggression.

    The situation remains tense as the conflict escalates, and the Ukrainian government is taking all necessary measures to strengthen its defense forces. Stay tuned for more updates on the Russia-Ukraine war live.

    Tags:

    Russia-Ukraine war, Ukraine police raids, draft evasion, Ukraine news, Ukraine conflict, Ukraine draft, Russia-Ukraine tensions, Ukraine military, Ukraine war updates, Ukraine draft dodgers

    #RussiaUkraine #war #live #Ukraine #police #conduct #nationwide #raids #draft #evasion #Ukraine

  • Russia promises retaliation after saying Ukraine fired US-supplied missiles | Russia-Ukraine war News

    Russia promises retaliation after saying Ukraine fired US-supplied missiles | Russia-Ukraine war News


    Outgoing US President Joe Biden has authorised Kyiv to use the long-range weapons against Russia.

    Russia has pledged to retaliate after it claimed to have shot down eight US-supplied ATACMS missiles fired by Ukraine at its border region of Belgorod.

    “On January 3, an attempt was made from Ukrainian territory to launch a missile attack against the Belgorod region using US-made ATACMS operational-tactical missiles,” the Russian Ministry of Defence said on Saturday.

    “These actions by the Kyiv regime, which is supported by Western curators, will be met with retaliation,” it added, saying all the missiles were shot down.

    The ministry said earlier that air defences downed eight ATACMS missiles in total, without saying when or where.

    Officials in Ukraine have not yet responded to the accusation.

    The Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) has a range of 300km (190 miles) and was first developed in the 1980s.

    Outgoing US President Joe Biden had authorised Kyiv to use long-range weapons against Russia last year, in a move the Kremlin denounced as a grave escalation of the nearly three-year conflict. Biden is expected to announce additional security assistance for Ukraine in the coming days, according to White House spokesperson John Kirby.

    US President-elect Donald Trump said in an interview last month he was “very vehemently” opposed to Ukraine using the arms, which he said were “escalating” the conflict.

    Besides military support from the US, Kyiv will also reportedly receive its first French Mirage 2000-5F multirole fighters this month, according to French magazine Avions Legendaires.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin threatened last year to strike central Kyiv with a hypersonic ballistic missile if Ukraine continued hitting Russian territory with long-range Western weapons.

    Both Kyiv and Moscow have accused each other of fatal attacks on civilians since the year began.

    A Russian attack on a village in Ukraine’s northeast Kharkiv region earlier on Saturday killed a 74-year-old man, regional Governor Oleg Synegubov said.

    At least three people, including two children, were wounded in a Russian attack on the Sumy region of northeastern Ukraine on Saturday, local authorities said. Sumy borders Russia’s Kursk region and has been regularly shelled by Russian forces for months.

    Russian forces also launched attacks near the Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk in an effort to bypass it from the south and cut off supply routes to Ukraine’s troops, the Ukrainian military said on Saturday.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy noted that Russia had launched 300 attack drones and 20 missiles at Ukrainian targets in the first three days of 2025, but said a large amount was shot down by Kyiv’s forces.

    “Such Russian terror, which continues with unrelenting intensity, requires both us and all our partners not to reduce efforts in strengthening our air defence shield and all its systemic components – from Patriot systems to mobile fire groups,” Zelenskyy said on his social media platforms.

    US Secretary of State Antony Blinken will embark on his final trip in office this weekend, travelling to South Korea, Japan, and France.

    At meetings in Paris, he is expected to discuss European security and Russia’s war in Ukraine with French officials, showcasing the Biden administration’s final outreach towards Kyiv before the Trump government takes over.



    In a recent escalation of tensions between Russia and Ukraine, Russia has accused Ukraine of firing US-supplied missiles at Russian forces. In response, Russia has promised retaliation against Ukraine.

    The incident has further strained relations between the two countries, which have been locked in a bitter conflict for years. The use of US-supplied missiles by Ukraine has raised concerns about the involvement of other countries in the conflict.

    The situation remains volatile, with both sides exchanging accusations and threats. The international community is closely monitoring the situation, and there are fears that the conflict could escalate further.

    Stay tuned for more updates on this developing story.

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    2. US-supplied missiles
    3. Retaliation promise
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  • Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,041 | Russia-Ukraine war News

    Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,041 | Russia-Ukraine war News


    Here are the key developments on the 1,041st day of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    Here is the situation on Tuesday, December 31:

    Fighting

    • A Ukrainian drone attack in the western Russia region of Smolensk, which borders Ukraine, caused a fuel spill and fire at an oil depot. The local governor said Russian air defence systems “suppressed an attack by Ukrainian” drones in Yartsevo district.
    • Russia’s Ministry of Defence reported 68 Ukrainian unmanned aerial vehicles were downed overnight with 10 destroyed over the Smolensk region.
    • Russia and Ukraine have swapped more than 300 prisoners of war (POWs) in an exchange brokered by the United Arab Emirates. Russia’s Defence Ministry said it swapped 150 Ukrainian POWs while Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said 189 Ukrainians returned home.
    Syria's de facto leader Ahmed al-Sharaa, also known as Abu Mohammed al-Golani walks as he meets with senior Ukrainian delegation led by Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha
    Syria’s de facto leader Ahmed al-Sharaa, right, also referred to as Abu Mohammed al-Julani, walks to meet a Ukrainian delegation in Damascus [Khalil Ashawi/Reuters]

    Politics:

    • US President Joe Biden announced his administration will provide nearly $2.5bn in military aid to Ukraine in the latest move to support the war-torn country ahead of President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration in January.
    • The United States also announced an additional $3.4bn in economic assistance to help Ukraine’s government and prop up its infrastructure with Biden stating he ordered his government to provide “as much assistance to Ukraine as quickly as possible”.
    • Syria’s new leader Ahmed al-Sharaa and other officials met Ukraine’s foreign minister with Syria expressing hopes of establishing “strategic partnerships” between the two countries.
    • Chinese President Xi Jinping promised to promote “world peace” in a New Year’s message to his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin, saying “China and Russia have consistently moved forward hand-in-hand along the correct path of non-alignment, non-confrontation and not targeting any third party”.
    • In a letter to mark the New Year, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un extended his greetings to his “dearest friend and comrade” Putin, the Russian people and Russian military personnel.
    • Moldova’s separatist Transnistria region cut gas supplies to state institutions ahead of the year-end expiration of a Russian gas transit deal through Ukraine – a day after Russian energy giant Gazprom said it would suspend gas exports to Moldova on January 1 over unpaid debts.



    As the Russia-Ukraine war enters its 1,041st day, tensions continue to escalate between the two nations. Here is a list of key events that have unfolded on this day:

    1. Russian forces launched a series of airstrikes on Ukrainian military positions in eastern Ukraine, causing significant damage and casualties.

    2. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky issued a strong condemnation of the Russian aggression, vowing to defend his country’s sovereignty and territorial integrity at all costs.

    3. The United Nations Security Council held an emergency meeting to discuss the situation in Ukraine, with member states expressing concern over the escalating violence.

    4. NATO announced that it would be deploying additional troops and military equipment to the region in support of Ukraine, further raising the stakes in the conflict.

    5. Reports emerged of widespread civilian displacement in eastern Ukraine, with thousands of people fleeing their homes in search of safety and shelter.

    As the conflict in Ukraine shows no signs of abating, the international community remains on high alert, with fears of a full-scale war looming large. Stay tuned for more updates on this developing situation.

    Tags:

    Russia-Ukraine war, key events, day 1,041, Russia-Ukraine war News, latest updates, conflict updates, international news, military developments, political updates

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  • North Koreans die in droves even as Russia unleashes firepower on Ukraine | Russia-Ukraine war News

    North Koreans die in droves even as Russia unleashes firepower on Ukraine | Russia-Ukraine war News


    Ukrainian forces have killed or wounded more than 1,000 North Korean troops Russia has sent to fight them, according to Kyiv and officials in South Korea.

    “According to preliminary data, the number of killed and wounded North Korean soldiers in the Kursk region already exceeds 3,000 people,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in his evening address on December 23.

    South Korean intelligence put the North Korean dead and wounded at 1,100, and said the North was preparing to send more troops. North Korea sent 11,000 troops to fight in the Russian region of Kursk, which Ukraine counter-invaded in August.

    North Korean troops were evidently untrained in dealing with Ukrainian drones, which took a high toll. In one instance, Ukrainian drone operators recorded how a North Korean soldier accidentally shot his comrade as they tried to shoot down the drone that was filming them.

    They may have been trying to execute a tactic described in a notebook recovered from the body of a North Korean soldier.

    “When detecting a drone, you need to create a trio, where the one who lures the drone keeps a distance of seven metres, and those who shoot it, 10-12 metres,” it read. “If the one who is luring stands still, the drone will also stop its movement. At this moment, the one who is shooting will eliminate the drone.”

    Ukraine’s Special Operations Forces said on Telegram their 8th regiment had killed 77 North Koreans in Kursk and wounded 40 over three days, without specifying the location. A video collage released by the regiment showed drones bearing down on individual enemy troops. Their signal cuts out at point-blank range, indicating the moment when the drones detonate.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin has been embarrassed by the first capture of Russian land since World War II and had initially pledged to push Ukrainian forces out by October 1.

    As the deadline drew near, his spokesman changed the Kremlin position, saying Ukraine’s forces would be ejected “in a timely manner”.  Putin reinforced that vagueness in an annual news conference on December 19. “I cannot and do not want to name a specific date when they will be knocked out,” he said.

    Some analysts suggested this could indicate a change in the Kremlin’s priorities, but Russia also seemed to make a concerted effort to improve its tactics on Christmas Eve.

    Oleg Chaus, a Ukrainian sergeant fighting in Kursk, said that whereas for the past month, the Russian assaults were “chaotic” and “disorganised”, three units attacked in an organised manner and with air support on December 24.

    “All the servicemen of these three groups had very high-quality ammunition. Each of them had disposable grenade launchers, they had night vision devices, they had small assault backpacks with them,” said the sergeant of Ukraine’s 17th Heavy Mechanised Brigade. “If one of those three groups had not been destroyed, they would have continued moving.”

    It appeared that these units included North Korean troops.

    Russia creeps forward in Donetsk

    Ukraine’s other hot front – its eastern region of Donetsk – saw intensified fighting during the Christmas holiday.

    Russia launched 248 assaults on Ukrainian positions on December 24, said Ukraine’s general staff, an unusually high number, followed by more than 200 assaults on Christmas day.

    During this time, geolocated footage suggested Russian forces broke through to the western part of the city of Kurakhove, which they had first entered in late October, completing its conquest.

    Anastasia Bobovnikova, spokesperson for Luhansk Technical University, said fierce battles were also ongoing for the Central Mine in the city of Toretsk.

    The most intense fighting, however, appeared to take place around the town of Pokrovsk, where a quarter to a fifth of the Russian assaults took place.

    “Pokrovsk is a vital road and rail hub, facilitating the movement of troops and supplies across eastern Ukraine,” Demetries Andrew Grimes, a former US naval officer, aviator and diplomat, told Al Jazeera.

    “Capturing Pokrovsk would disrupt Ukrainian supply lines and enhance Russian operational capabilities in the transportation and distribution of supplies across the entire front line,” he said.

    “The objective is likely to secure the rest of the Donbas and Zaporizhia,” said Michael Gjerstad, a land warfare research analyst for the International Institute for Strategic Studies.

    “This means possibly capturing Sloviansk and Kramatorsk, which have industrial and economic sites that are important for Ukraine, possibly moving towards Zaporizhia along the N15 road from the Kurakhove pocket, which would also bypass a lot of the Ukrainian defences, which face south,” he told Al Jazeera.

    These assaults, while clawing away land, were also costly. Bobovnikova said Russian forces were losing a mechanised battalion a week and a brigade a month in Toretsk.

    In the 10 days between December 17 and December 26, Ukraine’s general staff estimates Russia lost 17,400 soldiers, which translates to 52,200 a month. Russian recruitment capacity is considered to be not more than 30,000 a month.

    Nonetheless, Putin sounded bullish in his news conference. “We are not talking about advancing 100, 200, 300 metres; our fighters are reclaiming territory in square kilometres,” he said.

    The Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think tank, assessed that Russia had captured 3,306sq kilometres (1,276sq miles) of Ukrainian land during 2024.

    “The position of the front line is not going to be what determines this war,” said Keir Giles, a Eurasia expert for Chatham House.

    “In the economic and political domains, in Russia’s campaign against Ukrainian critical infrastructure and the systems for keeping people alive through the winter, it is also a picture of Russia holding an advantage, particularly after the arrival of Donald Trump,” he told Al Jazeera, referring to Trump’s win in the US presidential election in November. Trump has said that he wants to end the war immediately, and senior members of his team, including Vice President-elect JD Vance, have suggested that Ukraine would need to concede territory currently held by Russia as part of a ceasefire.

    Russia demonstrated its command of the air on December 25, with a massive air attack involving 78 missiles of various types and 106 Shahed kamikaze drones. Ukraine’s defences shot down 113 of the 184 targets, but many hit energy infrastructure.

    “Today, Putin deliberately chose Christmas for an attack. What could be more inhuman?” Zelenskyy said in his evening address on the same day.

    “The targets are our energy sector. They continue to fight for a blackout in Ukraine.”

    Five days earlier, on December 20, Russia launched five ballistic missiles at Kyiv. Ukraine said it downed all five, but falling debris hit a building that housed several embassies. It was part of a broader overnight attack that involved a sixth missile and 65 drones.

    Zelenskyy has been asking for ever-higher numbers of defence systems from his NATO allies. On December 19, NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte said the alliance would discuss how to provide the systems Zelenskyy has sought.

    Four days later, Germany announced a massive new military aid package, including two Patriot air defence launchers – each carrying four missiles, two short-range IRIS-T SLS launchers and one medium-range IRIS-T SLM launcher, each carrying eight missiles.

    Also included in the announced package were two Skynex 35mm air defence batteries, and ammunition for all these air defence systems.

    Next year, Ukraine is expected to receive four more IRIS-T SLM batteries of three launchers each, and three IRIS-T SLS launchers.

    During his news conference, Putin challenged the West to a contest between his new Oreshnik ballistic missile – test-fired at Ukraine for the first time on November 21 – and Western air defence systems.

    “Let Western experts propose to us … to conduct some kind of technological experiment, say, a high-tech duel of the 21st century. Let them determine some target for destruction, say in Kyiv, concentrate all their air defence and missile defence forces there, and we will strike there with Oreshnik and see what happens. We are ready for such an experiment, but is the other side ready?”

    Ukraine’s deep strikes

    Ukraine also struck at Russian energy and defence sites.

    On December 19, Ukraine’s military intelligence (GUR) said its saboteurs set “several” military refuelling stations alight in Novosibirsk, destroying them.

    On the same day, a Ukrainian drone attack on the Novoshakhtinsk oil refinery, the largest refinery in southern Russia, forced the plant to halt operations, The Moscow Times reported.

    GUR also revealed its saboteurs had been responsible for destroying an Antonov-72 military transport plane on the tarmac of Ostafievo airfield near Moscow on December 12. Footage published on December 22 purportedly showed a drone strike at the Steel Horse oil depot near the city of Oryol.

    The GUR said it had struck a warehouse in the Alabuga economic zone in Russia on December 23, where parts for Shahed-136 UAVs were stored. It claimed to have destroyed 65 fuselages of attack drones, as well as engines, navigation systems, and thermal imaging cameras for the production of 400 Shahed units.

    On December 26, Ukraine’s air force said it had struck an industrial facility in Russia’s Rostov region that produced fuel for solid-state rockets. The fuel from the factory at Kamensk-Shakhtinsky was used in ballistic missiles, including those fired into Ukraine’s civilian areas and power plants, Ukraine said.

    Ukraine’s foreign intelligence service estimated that Russian refineries’ downtime increased partly due to Ukrainian air strikes in 2024 to 41million tonnes from 36million tonnes last year.

    Zelenskyy told Ukrainians the armed forces would continue this policy.

    “We will definitely continue to strike Russian military targets – with drones and missiles, increasingly with Ukrainian-made ones, specifically targeting military bases and Russian military infrastructure used in this terror against our people,” he said in his evening address on December 21. “Our defence is entirely just.”

    The drone war

    Ukraine has prioritised the development of unmanned systems during the war to save manpower.

    On December 20, Ukraine’s national guard said it had successfully conducted a ground operation in Kharkiv using exclusively ground and aerial robotic systems.

    The assault included assault drones with mounted machineguns, kamikaze ground drones and drones capable of mining and demining. A spokesman who described the operation in a telethon also spoke of “large multi-rotor copters that can carry a large charge, for example, an antitank mine, and FPV drones. All this is supported and controlled by many carousels of surveillance drones. That is, we are talking about dozens of units of robotic and unmanned equipment simultaneously on a small section of the front.”

    Russia, too, has tried to keep up. Ukraine’s armed forces said they were facing a new threat in the form of Russian drones guided by fibre optics. The drones are immune to jamming by electronic warfare means and have proven successful on the battlefield – including in Pokrovsk.

    “We missed this moment with fibre optics and, frankly, we don’t know how to deal with it,” said Ivan Sekach, a spokesman for the 110th Mechanised Brigade.

    A special forces spokesman told ArmyTV that Ukraine was coming to grips with the new drones by shooting them down with Mavic drones or using their propellers to cut their fibre optics, rendering them uncontrollable.

    Ukraine is developing its own fibre optic drone, the Black Widow Web 10, which its general staff said is in the final stages of approval for use.

    Ukraine has been developing robotic and drone systems at a furious pace. Its armed forces introduced a new high-altitude battlefield surveillance drone during the past week. The Shchedryk can fly out of the range of most Russian air defence weapons and operates day and night.

    Autonomy is also a top priority for Ukraine, and a Ukrainian drone company recently reported that it had assembled a prototype of the first FPV drone made exclusively from components manufactured in Ukraine.



    The ongoing conflict between Russia and Ukraine continues to escalate, with devastating consequences for both countries. However, amidst the chaos and destruction, another tragedy is unfolding in North Korea. Reports have emerged of North Koreans dying in droves, as the regime struggles to cope with the impact of the war on its already fragile economy.

    As Russia unleashes its firepower on Ukraine, the international community is rightly focused on the conflict in Eastern Europe. But we cannot ignore the suffering of the North Korean people, who are paying a heavy price for their government’s oppressive policies and isolationist stance.

    The North Korean regime has long prioritized its military capabilities over the well-being of its citizens, and now, as the country faces mounting economic challenges, the consequences are becoming increasingly dire. Reports suggest that food shortages are widespread, with many North Koreans struggling to access basic necessities. In addition, the country’s healthcare system is reportedly overwhelmed, with hospitals unable to cope with the influx of patients.

    As the world grapples with the implications of the Russia-Ukraine war, we must not forget the plight of the North Korean people. It is imperative that the international community comes together to provide aid and support to those who are suffering, and to hold the North Korean regime accountable for its actions. Only by standing in solidarity with the people of North Korea can we hope to bring about positive change and alleviate their suffering.

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  • Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,037 | Russia-Ukraine war News

    Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,037 | Russia-Ukraine war News


    Here are the key developments on the 1,037th day of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    Here is the situation on Friday, December 27:

    Fighting:

    • South Korean intelligence said that an injured North Korean soldier dispatched to fight for Russia was captured alive by Ukrainian forces, according to the Yonhap news agency on Friday.
    • Russian drones struck a multistorey apartment building in the town of Chasiv Yar in the Donetsk region of Ukraine on Thursday, killing two people, according to regional officials.
    • Other attacks on Thursday hit an industrial area of the southeastern city of Zaporizhzhia and a market in the town of Nikopol in the Dnipropetrovsk region. The attacks on Ukraine’s east come after Russia’s Christmas day attack on the country’s energy system.
    • Russian forces captured the village of Hihant in eastern Ukraine, the RIA news agency reported on Thursday, citing the defence ministry.
    • The Ukrainian military claimed its air force had carried out a strike on a military-industrial facility in the Russian town of Kamensk-Shakhtinsky in the Rostov region over the previous few days. The facility was used to produce solid fuel for ballistic missiles used in Russian attacks on Ukraine, the Ukrainian military said on Thursday.
    • The Ukrainian military said on Thursday it shot down 20 drones out of 31 launched by Russia overnight.

    Politics and diplomacy:

    • China’s President Xi Jinping will visit Russia next year, Russia’s state-run RIA news agency quoted Russian ambassador to Beijing Igor Morgulov as saying on Friday. He said that Russia and China had to respond to United States policy jointly, referring to alleged NATO plans to “move its military infrastructure” into the Asia Pacific region. China has put forward a peace plan with Brazil to end the war.
    • Russian President Vladimir Putin told North Korean leader Kim Jong Un that the two countries will continue to implement the comprehensive strategic partnership treaty – which includes a mutual defence pact – that they signed in June, North Korea’s KCNA news agency reported on Friday.
    • Putin said on Thursday that he was open to a Slovakian proposal to host peace talks with Ukraine. “We are not opposed, if it comes to that. Why not? Since Slovakia takes such a neutral position,” he said after a visit by Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico to the Kremlin this week.
    • Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian is set to visit Moscow on January 17 to sign a cooperation agreement with Putin, according to Kazem Jalali, Iran’s ambassador to Russia, cited by Russian state news agency RIA on Thursday.
    • Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Thursday that his country was willing to work with Donald Trump’s incoming US administration to improve relations. But, he said, the US would have to make the first move since it had “interrupted” dialogue after “the start of a special military operation”. Trump, who enters office on January 20, has promised to swiftly end the war in Ukraine.

    Regional security:

    • Investigations into the Azerbaijan Airlines plane crash near the city of Aktau in Kazakhstan, which killed 38 people, are under way. Unnamed Azerbaijani and US officials were reported as saying they believed a Russian surface-to-air missile caused the deadly crash. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov cautioned against “hypotheses”.
    • Moldova’s parliament approved a 10-year defence strategy on Thursday, calling for increased defence spending as part of a plan to join the European Union. The move was ridiculed by the chamber’s pro-Russian opposition, given the relatively small size of Moldova’s armed forces. Pro-Western President Maia Sandu has accused Russia of trying to unseat her government.
    • Putin said on Thursday that there was no time left this year to sign a new Ukrainian gas transit deal, laying the blame firmly on Ukraine for refusing to extend the agreement that brings gas to Slovakia, the Czech Republic and Austria. The current five-year gas transit deal between Russia and Ukraine expires at the end of the year.



    As the Russia-Ukraine war enters its 1,037th day, tensions continue to escalate between the two countries. Here is a list of key events that have unfolded on this day:

    1. Russian forces launch a series of airstrikes on Ukrainian military positions in eastern Ukraine, causing significant damage to infrastructure and casualties among Ukrainian soldiers.

    2. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky delivers a passionate speech to the United Nations General Assembly, calling for greater international support in the face of Russian aggression.

    3. The United States announces a new round of sanctions against Russian oligarchs and government officials, in response to ongoing human rights violations in Ukraine.

    4. Ukrainian civilians in the war-torn regions of Donetsk and Luhansk continue to face dire humanitarian conditions, with limited access to food, water, and medical supplies.

    5. The European Union condemns Russia’s actions in Ukraine and pledges to increase military support for the Ukrainian government.

    6. Russian President Vladimir Putin dismisses international criticism of his country’s actions in Ukraine, claiming that Russia is defending its national interests and sovereignty.

    Stay tuned for more updates on the Russia-Ukraine war as the situation continues to unfold. #RussiaUkraineWar #Day1037 #KeyEvents

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